There is one job in America where celebrity status is not just inappropriate — it is actively dangerous to the institution itself. That job is Supreme Court Justice. Ketanji Brown Jackson apparently didn’t get the memo.
On America’s 250th birthday, Essence magazine unveiled its special collector’s edition featuring Justice Jackson on the cover, branded — without a trace of irony — “The People’s Champion.” Not “the Constitution’s guardian.” Not “faithful interpreter of the law.” The People’s Champion. A slogan ripped straight from professional wrestling and Democratic campaign rhetoric, slapped on a sitting member of the nation’s highest court.
The backlash was immediate and deserved.
Legal observers wasted no time pointing out the obvious: Supreme Court justices are not celebrities, and treating them like celebrities corrodes the one thing that gives the Court its legitimacy — the perception of impartiality. Alexander Hamilton understood this in 1788, writing, “It is easy to see that it would require an uncommon portion of fortitude in the judges to do their duty as faithful guardians of the Constitution, where legislative invasions of it had been instigated by the major voice of the community.” You cannot be “The People’s Champion” and a faithful constitutional guardian at the same time. The roles are fundamentally incompatible.
This isn’t the first time Jackson has blurred that line — it’s becoming a pattern. She did a high-fashion spread in Vogue after her confirmation. She made her Broadway debut in an LGBTQ-themed musical. Now she’s on a magazine cover with a political slogan. Each appearance chips away at the institutional credibility of a Court that the left simultaneously demands the public respect and obey — while their preferred justices treat it like a launching pad for a personal brand.
The contradiction is breathtaking. Democrats spent years screaming that the Supreme Court’s legitimacy was under assault — that conservative justices were politicizing the institution. Now their marquee justice is posing for collector’s edition magazine covers with activist slogans, and the same people who clutched their pearls over Justice Thomas’s RV are completely silent.
Here is the standard that actually matters: a Supreme Court justice’s job is to interpret the law, not to be celebrated by it. Not to accumulate a fanbase. Not to become a cultural icon. The moment a justice starts thinking of herself as “The People’s Champion,” she has already stopped thinking of herself as a neutral arbiter of the Constitution — and everything that follows flows from that corruption of purpose.
The American people deserve a Supreme Court that belongs to no one’s team. Not the left’s. Not the right’s. Just the law’s.
Ketanji Brown Jackson is auditioning for something else entirely. And the legal community — including voices on the left — is right to call it out.
